The Lovat Hotel


The Lovat Hotel is a hotel in Fort Augustus, at the southern end of Loch Ness in Scotland, originally built in the 1860s. It stands on the site of Kilwhimen Barracks, one of only four Hanoverian forts built to pacify the Highlands after the Jacobite rising of 1715 & Jacobite rising of 1719. The west curtain wall of the old fort still stands in the hotel grounds and measures 34 metres long by 4 metres high.
Bonnie Prince Charlie was in the barracks before he ordered the bombardment of the later Abbey Fort where the present day Fort Augustus Abbey now stands.

As a hotel, 1869 - present

Around 1869, Murdoch Bayne became the first person to run the building as a hotel. At this time, it was known as "The Inn".
On 22 July 1903, the Invergarry and Fort Augustus Railway was opened, running from Fort Augustus to Spean Bridge, and the hotel changed names to "The Lovat Arms & Station Hotel". The railway line closed temporarily on 31 October 1911, reopened again on 1 August 1913 before finally closing on 31 December 1946. After the closure of the railway the hotel become known as "The Lovat Arms Hotel".
David & Geraldine Gregory acquired the property in June 2005, known simply as "The Lovat", with their daughter Caroline. The hotel, The Lovat Loch Ness is now owned by Caroline Gregory and husband, Sean Kelly.

Hotel facilities

The hotel has 28 rooms on two floors and an award-winning restaurant. The hotel acts as a wedding venue and can be exclusively hired for a conference or celebration. The hotel is located on Loch Ness in the Scottish Highlands and near Cawdor Castle, Urquhart Castle and the Caledonian Canal.

Awards